A new audit from Pittsburgh City Controller Michael Lamb found two years worth of missing costs from the department in charge of repairing city buildings.

The missing information, which covers 2014 and 2015 in the Department of Public Work’s facilities division, along with the department’s habit of purchasing materials like lumber or roofing supplies in bulk, created an environment that could encourage theft, according to Lamb. However, the audit found no evidence that any had taken place.

During his 2017 Operating & Capital Budget presentation to Pittsburgh City Council on Monday morning, Mayor Bill Peduto announced that the city and Rivers Casino have reached an agreement to keep $10 million flowing into the budget for one year.

After the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled an annual tax that casinos pay to their host municipalities as unconstitutional in September, Pittsburgh and Rivers Casino, housed in the city’s North Shore, have been in talks as to whether or not the city would still receive the vital funds.

With last week’s decision by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court finding the local and county share assessments placed on casinos as unconstitutional, Pittsburgh officials are weighing in on what that could mean for the city.

Situated on the North Shore of the city is Rivers Casino, an establishment that brings in an estimated $10 million a year to the city with Allegheny County collecting about $5.5 million.

The effect of the supreme court’s decision could have an impact on the city and county counting on the gaming revenue it receives from Rivers Casino for their budgets.